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Early hypoalbuminemia is associated with 28-day mortality in severely burned patients: A retrospective cohort study

Authors :
Maurice Mimoun
Maïté Chaussard
Alexandre Fratani
Christian de Tymowski
Haikel Oueslati
Alexandru Cupaciu
James Anstey
Lucie Guillemet
Mourad Benyamina
Alexandre Mebazaa
Matthieu Legrand
Simon Pallado
Nabilla Moreno
Maxime Coutrot
Marion Jully
Sabri Soussi
M. Chaouat
Emmanuel Dudoignon
François Dépret
Source :
Burns. 46:630-638
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Hypoalbuminemia is a frequent condition in the first 24 h after a severe burn injury and is associated with worse outcomes.We investigated the relation between very early hypoalbuminemia (6 h after admission) and clinical outcome in a retrospective cohort admitted to our unit for severe burn injuries between 2012 and 2017.73 severely burned patients were included, with a delay of admission of 3 (2-4) h. In a context of early exogenous supply of albumin, admission and 4H Albuminemia (Alb4 h) were significantly lower in deceased patients (respectively, 34 (29-37) vs 27 (23-30) g/l; p = 0.009 and 27 (24-32) vs 21 (17-27) g/l; p = 0.022) whereas albuminemia ≥6 h were not. The best threshold value of Alb4 h to discriminate 28-day mortality was 23 g/l. Patients with an Alb4 h 23 g/l had a higher 28-day mortality than patients with an Alb4 h ≥ 23 g/l (42% vs 11%; p = 0.003); adjusted OR = 4.47 (95% CI 1.15-17.36); p = 0.03.In severely burned patients receiving early albumin supply, early hypoalbuminemia is associated with higher mortality whereas later albuminemia (≥6 h) is not. Exploration of whether early albumin infusion (8-12 h post injury) may alter clinical outcome is warranted.

Details

ISSN :
03054179
Volume :
46
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Burns
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d0421236d7036b3101675faa9687f8f6